
Stargazers by Sarah Summers
By Anthony Aguirre
Paradoxes arise when one or more convincing truths  contradict either each other, clash with other convincing truths, or  violate unshakable intuitions.  They are frustrating, yet beguiling.   Many see virtue in avoiding, glossing over, or dismissing them.  Instead  we should seek them out, if we find one sharpen it, push it to the  extreme, and hope that the resolution will reveal itself, for with that  resolution will invariably come a dose of Truth.
History is replete with examples and  with failed opportunities.  One of my favorites is Olber's paradox.   Suppose the universe were filled with an eternal roughly uniform  distribution of shining stars.  Faraway stars would look dim because  they take up a tiny angle on the sky; but within that angle they are as  bright as the Sun's surface.  Yet in an eternal and infinite (or finite  but unbounded) space, every direction would lie within the angle taken  up by some star.  The sky would be alight like the surface of the sun.   Thus, a simple glance at the dark night sky reveals that the universe  must be dynamic: expanding, or evolving.  Astronomers grappled with this  paradox for several centuries, devising unworkable schemes for its  resolution.  Despite at least one correct view (by Edgar Allen Poe!),  the implications never really permeated even the small community of  people thinking about the fundamental structure of the universe.  And so  it was that Einstein, when he went to apply his new theory to the  universe, sought an eternal and static model that could never make  sense, introduced a term into his equations which he called his greatest  blunder, and failed to invent the big-bang theory of cosmology.
Nature appears to contradict itself with the utmost  rarity, and so a paradox can be opportunity for us to lay bare our  cherished assumptions, and discover which of them we must let go.  But a  good paradox can take us farther, to reveal that the not just the  assumptions but the very modes of thinking we employed in creating the  paradox must be replaced.  Particles and waves?  Not truth, just  convenient models. The same number of integers as perfect squares of  integers?  Not crazy, though you might be if you invent cardinality.  This sentence is false. And so, says Godel, might be the foundations of  any formal system that can refer to itself.  The list goes on.
What next?  I've got a few big ones I'm  wrestling with. How can thermodynamics' second law arise unless  cosmological initial conditions are fine-tuned in a way we would never  accept in any other theory or explanation of anything? How do we do  science if the universe is infinite, and every outcome of every  experiment occurs infinitely many times? 
What impossibility is nagging at you?